Time Out (Sydney)

Parrtjima: A Festival of Light

The world’s first Aboriginal light festival is returning to Alice Springs for its fourth year. By Ben Neutze

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PEOPLE USUALLY VISIT Australia’s red centre for one of two reasons: to marvel at a place of extraordin­ary natural beauty, or to connect with the Indigenous cultures that have persisted for tens of thousands of years. But when you arrive in Alice Springs, it becomes immediatel­y clear that these two aims aren’t so easily separated. This place is home to the world’s oldest living culture, and their stories, lives and legacies have been shaped by the country. And you can’t really understand that country without understand­ing some of those stories.

That’s part of the purpose of Parrtjima, an annual festival of Aboriginal art and culture that lights up Alice Springs Desert Park. At its centre is a massive light show that covers more than two kilometres of the Macdonnell Ranges for ten nights from April 5 to 14. There are also projection­s that bring paintings to life, large communal spaces, and an inflatable artwork – which yes, children are invited to jump on – reflecting the dot painting pioneered in the central desert region.

This year’s festival coincides with United Nations Internatio­nal Year of Indigenous Languages, and the light show will be narrated by Alice Springs-born actor Aaron Pedersen. There are shows from musicians Baker Boy and Mojo Juju and a talk from academic Bruce Pascoe, whose book Dark Emu challenged myths we hold about Aboriginal people. The dazzling displays are by the team that created and developed Vivid Sydney. But what makes Parrtjima an essential cultural experience is the combinatio­n of cutting-edge technology with ancient art practices and stories of the Arrernte people of the local region.

Rhoda Roberts, head of First Nations programmin­g at Sydney Opera House, is the curator for the festival, and says bringing together the ancient and modern is a rewarding but challengin­g process. Roberts is a Bundjalung woman from northern NSW, and she works closely with a reference group of Arrernte elders. “The festival is done literally through their eyes,” Roberts says. “I’ll present stuff to them, but they’ll tell me whether they like it or they don’t. They’re very honest.” And it’s not just a matter of liking the work – the stories that are told through these artworks are sacred, and some have been kept secret for thousands of years. The Elders are their custodians and take their responsibi­lities very seriously.

But unlike plenty of the places we now see the dot paintings and vivid patterns developed by Arrernte people – on mass-produced souvenirs that sometimes plagiarise these artists’ work – Parrtjima is led by Arrernte people. They’re also front and centre at the festival, and there are plenty of opportunit­ies to meet the artists behind the work and gain a deeper understand­ing of their lives and practice. “It’s to really bring people back to the place where those sand ceremonies were done and then transferre­d onto canvas,” Roberts says. “These communitie­s have given so much to the nation through their artwork.”

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